Based on notions above, it can be concluded that reading is an active cognitive process which requires brain work together with eyes in order to get information
and knowledge in verbal or printed symbol.
2.2 Notion of Teaching Reading
Reading skills are often regarded as perceptive skills and link to listening skills. There are similarities, but one important difference is that the reader can take
control of the input more easily. Woods 2005:62 says that a listening input is often taped with pauses built in or controlled by teacher. When reading,
however, a reader determines the speed of the activity by himself so that this becomes one of the positive things to stress to students in the teaching of
reading.
When trying to gauge how difficult a particular text will be for students, teachers need to bear in mind not only the inherent difficulty of the text, but also the
nature of the tasks they plan to set and whether they require students to attempt such tasks before, during or after students have studied the text. Woods
2005:63 classifies the activities in reading class into three as follows: 1. Pre-reading tasks
This task can be in form of vocabulary games, word searches and matching synonyms. These activities can help students to approach a text in a more
confident way. Other pre-reading activities that can help readers relate to the full meaning of a text are ones which activate top-down skills, or
schematic knowledge. All of them enable students to familiarize themselves with the content of a text. The activities can be systemic such as vocabulary
exercise or schematic such as thinking of the purpose of a text or predicting the content from its title.
2. While-reading tasks These kinds of task, as Hedge in Woods 2005:63 states, have become more
used since the adoption of the idea of reading as an interactive process. These encourage learners to be active as they read. Students can be given
activities which require them to do any of the following: follow the order of the ideas in a text; react to the opinion expressed; understand the
information it contains; asks themselves questions; make notes; confirm expectations of prior knowledge or predict the next part of a text from
various clues.
3. Post-reading tasks These tasks follow up the work covered and seek to extend candidates. Such
activities are directed writing activities are directed writing activities, or role play and group discussion activities.
2.3 Passage